Friday, October 20, 2017

New York City is a visual overload. As promised from the last post this one is all about the art! I did not get most of the artist's names as I looked at hundreds of pieces of art in the two weeks we were there. But sometimes it is just fine to look at the visuals without names, titles or written intent.

One update is: the big band Vince Giordano and the Nighthawks which we saw at the Iguana Club I wrote a about in my last post has now hired my nephew Evan as the clarinet player and has also hired as sub a couple of times his brother Arnt on banjo. So cool!!!

Sharon and I went with Rob to see his old pal Sanjay and we met them at the St Cloud Social on Time Square...we did not have champagne $$$$$$

went for lunch with our nephew Arnt and this is his wallet....quite the assemblage I would say

Sunday, June 18, 2017

Well I turned 65 this year and wanted to do something special. For my 60th we moved to Amsterdam for 6 months. On my actual birthday I rented this cool old motor boat and 6 of us toured the canals, drank champagne and ate snacks.

How to top that one? New York City of course! I had 7 of my nearest and dearest with significant birthdays in 2017 (1 at 50, 3 at 60 and 3 at 65 and me).
So I put my organizing hat on and 12 of us came from Vancouver, 2 from Berlin, 2 from Amsterdam, 2 from Memphis, 1 from Florida and about 10 from NYC to make this great gang that hung out over 10 days with art, music, walks, sailing, eating, drinking and partying.

Everyone took care of their own accommodations so we had people in Brooklyn, Lower East Side, Soho and we were in the West Village in a fabulous apartment with a spiral staircase to the deck, lent to us by a friend.

Arnt barbecuing chicken and veg skewers
for a final dinner with the leftover gang

this is next door to our building

BROOKLYN

We started in Brooklyn at our very generous friend Michael's 5 story brownstone for a brunch and to make a plan of attack. Our list of fun was so great that we ended up with most events having 10 to 20 people at each. I had never been to Brooklyn and was pleasantly surprised with the neighbourhood feel, direct train from our stop in the Village and architecture. Pauline, Simon and Michael hosted a delicious brunch and we hung out for quite awhile before taking a walk through Dumbo and then up onto the Brooklyn Bridge to Manhattan.

Monday, May 1, 2017

This last month I have been getting out to a few galleries for the Capture Festival and also had an inspiration pass from the library and went with friends and family to museums, etc.

CAPTURE FESTIVAL 2017

I was so pleased to be a venue in this year's http://capturephotofest.com/ Two artists from the neighbourhood, Ross den Otter and Kiku Hawkes www.kikuhawkes.com created an installation in my two storefront windows. It is up until May 30th so if you are in the hood please stop by. Open 24 hours and does look great at night as well. Here is a link to a video I did of it.. https://www.instagram.com/p/BSuCEuThsz-/ (click on the image for the video)
Here is a brief write up they wrote about the show:
"For some decades, Ross den Otter and Kiku Hawkes artists and long-time residents of Strathcona, have documented the area’s built form. Their collaborative installation sites images of the area’s ethnically and economically diverse past within the context of its current iteration. A landscape of local, found materials frame photographs rotating at varying speeds, expressing time and space. These unique 3D objects, created through alternative processes, reanimate a rapidly vanishing world."

Ross and Kiku setting up the installation

I went with my photographer friend Sally Gooding sallygooding.ca to a few venues.

Ross den Otter was having another show all based on the selfie at his studio

www.pinkmonkeystudios.com He sets up his camera but you pull the string (which is the shutter) when you want. Who owns the rights to this photo? A thinker right!

We then headed over to The Flats and bumped into another photographer Jeff Cruz www.jeffcruz.ca from Calgary so the three of us went to several galleries together.

Sunday, March 26, 2017

I
have not done a blog post for quite a while. The reason is my friend
for over 40 years, Norma died in December. One of the things we did
together was talk about what I had posted last time whether it was
travels or art. I won't have that part of my blog posts anymore and has
taken me this long to try to deal with that.

Our
friendship started in Panajachel, Guatemala with dancing at the Coco
Loco and drinking rum out of a coconut. I had to cross a river on a log
to get home so if it was too late I would sleep at Norma's and that
bonded us for life.

She
lived in Santa Fe at a Buddhist Centre and was a painter and sculptor.
I am lucky to have a few of her pieces. Norma was a fantastic
friend...I could call her anytime and talk about anything. I visited
her in Santa Fe several times and we always had such a great time.
Whenever anyone would visit her she made a list of things to do that she
knew we would be interested in. I loved her rooms at the Centre where
we had PJ parties and made art, drives in the desert, visits to the Taos
Pueblo, Spanish Market, Harry's Diner for pie, the old lady who ran the
religious store, Mexican food, churches, graveyards, thrifts and of
course visiting the many museums and art galleries. We would have deep
discussions as well as great belly laughs.

On
the days she worked she would drop me off in the neighbourhood she was
working in and I would spend hours photographing so I have some lovely
photo memories. She was a gentle soul and I will miss her terribly.

I
left off my last post in Scotland and this is the second half of the
journey when we headed to England. I asked a couple friends who came
from England about a place to visit other than London and both said
York. We got off the train in York and stayed for three days. A lovely
quaint walled city with the biggest church!

About Me

I have been an artist for over 20 years. As I travel in different countries, including my own, I find I need to create art to continue my experience and memories of those places. My assemblage pieces consist of found objects combined with my photographs and treasures collected during my travels. Once in the studio I take from my myriad of labeled boxes an object that I want to start with and combine it with other objects, text, photographs usually constructed in a found box to tell the story.